Carla Hall is an editorial board member who writes about homelessness, reproductive rights, popular culture, animal welfare, and human rights in Asia and Africa, among other topics. Before joining the board, she was a general assignment reporter for the Los Angeles Times’ California section. She previously worked for the Washington Post’s Style section, where she juggled writing with acting roles in small theaters and even a couple of TV shows. She has a bachelor’s degree in the history of science from Harvard University.
Latest From This Author
I will always cherish the time I spent with a baby elephant being hand-reared at the Oakland Zoo. Now, 28 years later, the zoo made the right decision to retire its last elephant.
Even though state governments set abortion laws now, a Trump administration hostile to abortion access could have a significant and disturbing impact on reproductive rights. Here are some of the ways.
Kamala Harris, the most unexpected and historic of major presidential candidates, has already earned your vote.
Her owner told police that Miss Sassy had been abducted by Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, sparking false pet-eating rumors that were amplified by Donald Trump and JD Vance. In fact, the cat was just chilling in the basement.
U.S. astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are stuck on the International Space Station for the moment. How do you manage when your eight-day visit to space turns into months?
P-22 was weakened by rat poison and a presumed car strike. We can do better by his successor.
The idea that working in porn automatically makes you a liar or amoral is deeply offensive, and a vestige of antiquated attitudes about sex work and what women, in particular, should and should not do with their lives.
Republican South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a VP contender, brags about killing her dog and goat in a new memoir. The backlash has been bipartisan.
O.J. Simpson’s death brings back memories of chronicling the scenes surrounding the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman, and the Trial of the Century.
April showers bring more than May flowers. They also cause lots of tire-eating potholes in L.A. roads. The city can’t fill them fast enough and budget cuts will make it worse.